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Weissman, B., Cohn, N., & Tanner, D. (2024). The electrophysiology of lexical prediction of emoji and text. Neuropsychologia, 198, 108801. [doi | pdf]

Weissman, B. (2024). Can an emoji be a lie? The links between emoji meaning, commitment, and lying. Journal of Pragmatics219, 12-29. [doi]

Weissman, B., Engelen, J, Baas, E., & Cohn, N. (2023). The lexicon of emoji? Conventionality modulates processing of emoji. Cognitive Science 47(4). [doi | pdf]

Weissman, B. (2022). What counts as a lie in and out of the courtroom? The effect of discourse genre on lie judgments. In L. Horn (ed.) From Lying to Perjury: Linguistic and Legal Perspectives on Lies and Other Falsehoods. [doi]

Terkourafi, M., Weissman, B., & Roy, J. (2020). Different scalar terms are affected by face differently, International Review of Pragmatics, 12(1), 1-43. [online version]

Weissman, B. (2019). The roles of linguistic meaning and context in the concept of lying. PhD diss., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2019. [pdf]

Weissman, B. (2019). Peaches and eggplants or. . . something else? The role of context in emoji interpretations. In Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America, Vol 4 (2019). [pdf]

Tanner, D., Goldshtein, M., and Weissman, B. (2018). Individual differences in the real-time neural dynamics of language comprehension. In K. Federmeier & D. Watson (eds.) Psychology of Learning and Motivation: Current Topics in Language (Vol 68). Cambridge, MA: Academic Press. [pdf]

Weissman, B. and Terkourafi, M. (2018). Are false implicatures lies? An experimental investigation. Mind & Language. [doi]

Weissman, B. and Tanner, D. (2018). A strong wink between verbal and emoji-based irony: How the brain processes ironic emojis during language comprehension. PloS one, 13(8), e0201727. [online version]

Terkourafi, M., Catedral, L., Haider, I., Karimzad, F., Melgares, J., Mostacero, C., Nelson, J., and Weissman, B. (2018). Uncivil Twitter: A sociopragmatic analysis. Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict 6(1). [pdf]